Iran to Increase Gas Export to Armenia

TASNIM News Agency
Iran – Aug 15 2023
  • August, 15, 2023 – 16:46 
  • Economy news 


This contract was inked in Armenia’s capital of Yerevan on Tuesday in the presence of Deputy Oil Minister and CEO of the National Iranian Gas Company (NIGC) Majid Chegeni, Director of Yerevan Thermal Electricity Power Plant Aram Ghazarian and Iranian Ambassador to Yerevan Mehdi Sobhani, IRNA reported.

An initial agreement on the new contract had been struck in November 2022 following a visit by Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan to Tehran.

After technical talks, the final document of the contract was finalized on August 10.

According to this report, Iran’s export of gas to Armenia is done within the framework of a bartering contract of energy between the two countries.

Under the new contract, Iran’s gas export volume to Armenia increases and the ratio of bartering gas with electricity is amended in favor of the NIGC.

Iran’s gas export pipeline to Armenia has an annual transmission capacity of more than one billion cubic meters.

Armenpress: Pregnant woman suffers miscarriage in blockaded Nagorno-Karabakh because ambulance was unavailable due to fuel shortages

 09:51,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 16, ARMENPRESS. Human Rights Defender of Armenia Anahit Manasyan has issued a statement strongly condemning the gross violations of the fundamental rights of Armenians living in Nagorno-Karabakh by Azerbaijan.

Below is the full statement released by Manasyan.

“The humanitarian crisis is worsening daily in Nagorno-Karabakh: The Human Rights Defender strongly condemns the gross violations of the fundamental rights of Armenians living in Nagorno-Karabakh by Azerbaijan.

“It is the 247th day that the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh are under blockade, and two months (as of June 15) that the latter have been deprived of any kind of humanitarian aid, including basic necessities and food. The Human Rights Defender records that the blockade of the Lachin corridor by Azerbaijan has resulted in the gross violation of the fundamental rights of the residents of Nagorno-Karabakh, including the rights to life, dignity, physical and mental health and healthcare, freedom of movement, food and an adequate standard of living, housing, and other socioeconomic and cultural rights.

“The blockade has a particular adverse impact on the rights of representatives of vulnerable groups, such as children, women, persons with disabilities, etc. In particular, 9000 persons with disabilities, 20,000 older persons, and 60,000 women are under the blockade. The humanitarian disaster caused by the blockade is manifested in all spheres of the normal life of residents, in particular:

 “The standard of living of the people is in a deteriorated state. Since June 15, the complete disruption of humanitarian aid supplies has created a crisis situation, including the risk of hunger and starvation. The residents of Yeghtsahogh, Hin Shen, Mets Shen and Lisagor communities of Shushi region of Nagorno-Karabakh are in a particularly terrible situation since they are under complete blockade as a result of the establishment of the Azerbaijani checkpoint. Locally produced seasonal agricultural products from different regions and communities of Nagorno-Karabakh are no longer delivered to densely populated places – Stepanakert, Martuni and Martakert. In all grocery stores, the total absence or scarcity of food, basic necessities, and hygiene items was recorded, and the acquisition of the latter is carried out through huge queues.

 “In this context, it is also necessary to address the impossibility of providing humanitarian aid from the Republic of Armenia to Nagorno-Karabakh. Since June 15 as a result of blocking the possibility of providing humanitarian aid by Azerbaijani authorities, the humanitarian aid has remained standing as of today, arriving at Kornidzor village from Yerevan on July 26. On July 28, the representatives of the Defender’s office together with the representatives of the diplomatic corps accredited in Armenia and international organizations arrived in Kornidzor, the humanitarian convoy sector, and got acquainted with the situation on the spot.

“Due to the daily deterioration of people’s health and malnutrition, cases of fainting also continue to increase. According to the information registered by the Human Rights Defender’s office a person died from starvation in NK. A resident of Stepanakert, K. Hovhannisyan, died as a result of chronic malnutrition, protein and energy deficiency.

“The blocking of the Lachin corridor has a negative impact on the realization of the right to health care of the people, taking into consideration the prohibitions on the transfer of patients in need of medical care to Armenia. The transportation of patients and transportation of medical supplies is carried out with the intervention of the ICRC and Russian peacekeepers. At the same time, since June 15, the Azerbaijani side has completely blocked the delivery of humanitarian aid by Russian peacekeepers and the ICRC, leading to the worsening of the humanitarian situation. There have been cases of shortage of medicines, and in some cases, the complete absence of medicines.

“At the same time, in the absence of sufficient food, there has been an increase in the number of premature births in NK. A case of death of an unborn child was also registered in Haterk village of Martakert region. The pregnant woman could not reach the hospital on time because of fuel shortage for emergency vehicles.

“Since July 25 due to an acute shortage of fuel public transport has not been functioning at all. · On July 29, fundamental violations by the Azerbaijani authorities were recorded during the process of transferring patients to Armenia through ICRC. In particular, Azerbaijan abducted 68-year-old Vagif Khachatryan from the checkpoint located in the vicinity of the Hakari bridge, who was being transported to Armenia for medical treatment accompanied by the ICRC. The results of the Defender’s study prove that the unlawful interference with the fundamental rights of a person is being carried out in a violation of international legal guarantees and standards.

“Issues related to the provision of drinking water as a result of electricity supply failures were also recorded, affecting both the quantity and quality of water provided to the residents of NK. The Defender considers it necessary to emphasize again that the current humanitarian catastrophe is a direct manifestation of the ethnic cleansing and genocidal policy by the Azerbaijani authorities incited and adduced by Armenophobia, the ultimate goal of which is to empty Nagorno-Karabakh of its indigenous Armenian population, through terrorizing them, subjecting them to constant physical and psychological attacks and pressures, depriving them of their normal life and creating desperate conditions for life. The Human Rights Defender especially emphasizes the urgency to stop the irreversible and intensifying developments of the humanitarian disaster, as well as the extreme necessity to provide real opportunities for the implementation of humanitarian missions. At the same time, the Defender’s office continues to collect and analyze facts on a daily basis regarding the Armenophobic policy of the Azerbaijani authorities, as well as the continuous gross violations of human rights in Nagorno-Karabakh as a result of the blocking of the Lachin corridor, and comprehensively present them to international organizations with a human rights mandate. I attach great importance to the appropriate response of international organizations with a mandate to protect human rights and to take effective steps as a matter of urgency.”

Senators call for US-backed UNSC resolution demanding end of blockade,unfettered humanitarian access to Nagorno-Karabakh

 10:05,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 16, ARMENPRESS. U.S. Senators have called on the U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Linda Thomas-Greenfield, the current President of the U.N. Security Council, to exert pressure on Azerbaijan and ‘take a strong stance’ at the forthcoming U.N. Security Council emergency meeting on Nagorno-Karabakh.

“We write to urge you to take a strong stance at today’s U.N. Security Council emergency meeting on the crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh to address the humanitarian crisis,” Senator Robert Menendez, the Chairman of the United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, and Senator Alex Padilla said in a letter addressed to Linda Thomas-Greenfield.

Describing the ongoing situation resulting from the Azeri blockade, the Senators added that “Azerbaijan’s actions are nothing short of an attempt of ethnic cleansing of the Armenian community that has lived there for centuries.”

The American lawmakers recalled that former chief prosecutor of the ICC, Luis Moreno Ocampo, has warned that “there is a reasonable basis to believe that a Genocide is being committed.”

“We are encouraged that the United States supported the call for convening the meeting. In your capacity as the President of the U.N. Security Council for August 2023, we ask that you work with all UNSC members to pressure the Azerbaijani government to lift the blockade and prevent what the evidence suggests is a coordinated effort to ethnically cleanse the people of Nagorno-Karabakh. Specifically, we urge you to introduce a resolution calling for an immediate end of the blockade and unfettered humanitarian access to the region,” the Senators added.

First death from starvation reported in blockade-struck Nagorno-Karabakh

Aug 15 2023
 15 August 2023

An empty supermarket in Stepanakert. Photo: Ani Balayan/CivilNet.

The authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh have reported that a 40-year-old man has starved to death in the eighth month of the region’s blockade by Azerbaijan. 

In a statement on Tuesday evening, the Human Rights Defender’s Office said that K Hovhannisyan had died of ‘chronic malnutrition’ and ‘protein and energy deficiency’. The statement was accompanied by a photo of an emaciated body [warning: link contains graphic imagery] purportedly that of Hovhannisyan.

The Human Rights Defender’s Office laid the blame for Hovhannisyan’s death squarely on Azerbaijan, calling it one of the ‘catastrophic consequences of the ongoing 8-month-long blockade of Artsakh [Nagonro-Karabakh] by Azerbaijan’.

The statement added that the impact of the blockade on the public health sector ‘primarily affects the health situation of the most vulnerable groups of the society — children, pregnant women, people with chronic diseases, people with disabilities, and older persons’. 

Nagorno-Karabakh’s population of around 120,000 people have not been able to leave or enter the region since mid-December, when Azerbaijani government-backed protesters, later replaced by a border checkpoint, blocked the Lachin Corridor, the only road connecting Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia. Supplies to the region have also been intermittently blocked, with the humanitarian aid previously delivered by the Red Cross and Russian peacekeeping forces halted since mid-June, leading to acute shortages of food and medicine. 

The absence of fuel and electricity supplies from Armenia has also led to rolling blackouts and the suspension of public transport, cutting settlements off from each other. 

While residents in rural areas have in part used agricultural lands to meet their needs, supermarkets in the capital Stepanakert have remained bare, with supplies from villages unable to reach the city due to the lack of fuel. 

The suspension of waste collection due to the fuel shortage has also raised concerns of a possible epidemic in Stepanakert, as waste piles up in the summer heat. 

Azerbaijan denies blocking the Lachin Corridor and also insists that supplies could be delivered from Azerbaijani-held Aghdam, a proposal dismissed as untenable by Stepanakert and Yerevan.

A number of Western countries and international organisations have called on Azerbaijan to lift the blockade and restore free passage of people and goods, one of the stipulations of the 2020 ceasefire agreement. 

Following Hovhannisyan’s death on Tuesday, Armenia’s Ambassador-at-large, Edmon Marukyan, called on the international community to ‘take action’ to prevent the ‘ethnic cleansing’ of Nagorno-Karabakh’s Armenian population.

‘We were warning about this on a daily basis for already 8 months’, Marukyan wrote.

The UN Security Council is due to hold an urgent meeting on Wednesday to discuss the situation.

 For ease of reading, we choose not to use qualifiers such as ‘de facto’, ‘unrecognised’, or ‘partially recognised’ when discussing institutions or political positions within Abkhazia, Nagorno-Karabakh, and South Ossetia. This does not imply a position on their status.

https://oc-media.org/first-death-from-starvation-reported-in-blockade-struck-nagorno-karabakh/

The Armenian illuminated manuscripts of Medieval Artsakh and Armenia

Aug 16 2023
by LIANNA AGASYAN

Armenian illuminated manuscripts in Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) and Armenia include various humanities of Ancient and Medieval Armenian culture and sciences. The art form was embraced by Greater and Lesser Armenia.

It first appeared in Ancient Armenia with the creation of the Armenian alphabet in 405 AD.

Only a few fragments of an illuminated manuscript from the 6th and 7th centuries have survived. The oldest complete manuscript dates from the 9th century. When the leading Armenian schools and centres began to emerge in the 13th and 14th centuries, art experienced a Golden Age.

Armenian miniaturists have always interacted with other artists from the East and West, and their art has deeply and richly influenced Armenian

One of the manuscripts from before 1261 was illustrated by one of the famous masters of Armenian miniature, Toros Taronatsi: the manuscripts produced in the southern regions of Artsakh and the Lake Sevan basin are of great iconographic interest and artistic value.

The iconographic features of illuminated manuscripts were created between the 13th and the 18th centuries; more than a hundred images of the illuminated manuscripts are included in the books, aimed at spreading the culture of Artsakh and Utik.

The manuscripts are also related to other forms of medieval Armenian art and Byzantine illuminated manuscripts.

Most of the surviving Armenian manuscripts are Gospels. Portraits are found
as early as the 11th century but always appear in the Bible and Gospels.

Armenian Illuminated manuscripts occupy a very special place in Armenian culture. Early Armenian painted manuscripts feature celebratory designs associated with Armenian culture.

In addition to rich architecture, manuscripts are the most important medium of artistic _expression_. They span over a millennium of Armenia’s turbulent history and comprise a storehouse of national memory of singular significance.

Manuscripts embodied the power of art and the universality of language.

About 30,000 ancient Armenian manuscripts worldwide, most of which (about 20,000) are preserved in Matenadaran, Yerevan.

Other important collections of Armenian manuscripts are kept in the Library of the Armenian Patriarchate in Jerusalem (approximately 4,000 manuscripts), the Mekhitarist Monastery in Vienna (about 2,500 manuscripts), and the Mkhitarian Brotherhood in Venice (about 4000 manuscripts).

You can follow Lianna Agasyan on X.

https://greekcitytimes.com/2023/08/17/armenian-illuminated-manuscripts/

Azerbaijani armed forces open gunfire at Armenian military border positions in Gegharkunik Province

 18:46,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 16, ARMENPRESS. The Azerbaijani military opened gunfire on August 16 at Armenian positions near Norabak, a village in Gegharkunik Province, the defense ministry said in a statement.

“On August 16, at around 5:30 p.m., Azerbaijani armed forces units fired from fire arms towards the Armenian combat outposts in the vicinity of Norabak,” the defense ministry said.

OSCE Chairperson-in-Office instructs personal representative to visit adjacent areas of Lachin Corridor

 18:53,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 16, ARMENPRESS.  Chairperson-in-Office of the OSCE Bujar Osmani has instructed his personal representative Andrzej Kasprzyk to visit the Lachin Corridor’s adjacent areas. 

“After phone conversations last week with the foreign ministers of Azerbaijan and Armenia, as OSCE Chairperson-in-Office I instructed my personal representative Andrzej Kasprzyk to visit the adjacent areas of Lachin Corridor and report to me details on the current situation,” Osmani said in a statement posted on Facebook.

He also reiterated his call related to restoring freedom of movement along Lachin Corridor, and at the same time called for work in the direction of opening new roads.

“Humanitarian factors must take precedence over political ones. The OSCE is ready to be involved as a mediator as long as dialogue over political issues resumes,” he added.

Nagorno-Karabakh: Armenia Demands End to Azerbaijan Blockade Amid Accusations of Genocide

Democracy Now
Aug 17 2023

Armenia is calling on the United Nations Security Council to address a worsening humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh, a region of Azerbaijan home to ethnic Armenians that has been under a blockade for eight months. Armenia and Azerbaijan have fought multiple wars over the territory since the collapse of the Soviet Union, most recently in 2020. Azerbaijan closed the only road into the region in December, severely restricting the movement of food, medicine and other supplies for the roughly 120,000 people living there. “We cannot accept a new Armenian genocide in 2023,” says Luis Moreno Ocampo, the Argentine lawyer who served as the first prosecutor of the International Criminal Court. He issued a report earlier this month on the blockade. We also speak with Anna Ohanyan, professor of political science and international relations at Stonehill College, who says Azerbaijan is relying on “the use of hunger as a weapon” in order not to engage politically with the largely self-governing region of Nagorno-Karabakh.


This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.

AMY GOODMAN: This is Democracy Now!, democracynow.org, The War and Peace Report. I’m Amy Goodman, with Nermeen Shaikh.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: The U.N. Security Council met Wednesday to discuss the blockade imposed by Azerbaijan in Nagorno-Karabakh, as Armenia and other nations called for the immediate reopening of the Lachin corridor to allow for humanitarian aid for the roughly 120,000 people suffering severe shortages in the breakaway region. Twenty-three-year-old English teacher Nina Shaverdyan, a resident of Nagorno-Karabakh, described life under the blockade.

NINA SHAVERDYAN: We don’t have gas. We have electricity blackouts. So, for example, at 5:00, we will have a blackout again, so we will not have electricity for two hours, and then this is repeating itself. We don’t have water, because we have only one water reservoir, which is used right now to produce electricity, and it’s not enough. So right now we have also water shortages. And because of the water shortages and electricity shortages and no gas, the bakeries don’t work, so there is not enough bread even in the shops.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: That was Nina Shaverdyan. She also noted there’s a shortage of fuel, further isolating those who are not able to walk or walk long distances.

A recent report by former International Criminal Court prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo found the blockade amounts to a likely genocide of the local Armenian population. Azerbaijan has rejected the accusation.

Tensions have been running high in Nagorno-Karabakh since December of last year, when the blockade started. The crossing has been totally sealed off since mid-June. The population of the disputed region is majority Armenian, but it’s part of Azerbaijan, after Azerbaijani forces regained control of the territory in the 2020 war, leaving the Lachin corridor as the area’s only connector with Armenia.

AMY GOODMAN: Well, for more, we’re joined by two guests. In Boston, Anna Ohanyan, professor of political science and international relations at Stonehill College, is joining us. Her latest book is The Neighborhood Effect: The Imperial Roots of Regional Fracture in Eurasia. And joining us from the capital of Colombia, Bogotá, Luis Moreno Ocampo, Argentine lawyer who served as the first prosecutor of the International Criminal Court. He also was the deputy prosecutor in Argentina’s Trial of the Juntas.

We welcome you both to Democracy Now! Luis Moreno Ocampo, we last had you on with the Oscar-nominated film Argentina, 1985, which was about the Trial of the Junta against the leaders of the Argentine coup, led by Jorge Rafael Videla. Right now you’re talking about Azerbaijan. Can you talk about your findings?

LUIS MORENO OCAMPO: It’s very basic. Some Armenian people asked my expert opinion. I have experience. I prosecuted for genocide President al-Bashir for Darfur genocide. And it’s very simple because the facts are exposed by the International Court of Justice, who said to Azerbaijan they cannot blockade the corridor that provides food and other essentials to the Armenians living in the region of Nagorno-Karabakh. So, it’s very basic, as just the facts are there. It’s just like the king is naked.

You know what? The International Court of Justice say Azerbaijan is blocking the essentials for the life of these Armenian people, and that’s exactly, exactly what Article II of the Genocide Convention say. The genocide have different forms to be committed. Killing massive numbers is one, (a), but (c) require not [inaudible]. It’s just creating conditions to destroy the life of the group. And that is what’s happened today in Azerbaijan. That’s why it’s funny. It’s funny because it’s like a shock, but it’s obvious. It’s a genocide today. The question is now not debate genocide; the question is prevent the killings, prevent the death of these people. You present one of the victims. In a few minutes, I will be in a press conference with the people of Nagorno-Karabakh by Zoom. So, they are there, and they are dying.

So, what do we do? And that’s the question. Because I was listening to your show, and when you have a national crime, you have judges and prosecutors. When George Floyd was killed, you had judges and prosecutor. Here, there is no judge or prosecutor for this chosen case, because the International Criminal Court has no juridiction. So, the U.N. Security Council is the only global institutions who can solve the problem.

And the problem there is there are tensions today — that’s obvious — between Russia, U.S. and France. These are the three key actors. If they agreed how to manage the problem, they stop this genocide in one minute. And that’s why it’s interesting. Here, the solution is very, very simple. It’s an agreement between the U.S., France and Russia to stop the genocide. It’s easy. And my last point is, Ukraine is a big conflict, is a big crime, but Armenian victims could not be collateral damage of the Ukrainian conflict, could not be. We should not accept a new Armenian genocide in 2023.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: Could you explain, elaborate on that point, what you mean when you say that the Armenians who are stuck in Nagorno-Karabakh should not be collateral damage of the war in Ukraine? If you could talk about that? And then also say — you say that you based your decision on the — your findings on the decision taken by the International Court of Justice earlier this year. Explain what that decision was. It was legally binding. And what followed that decision? What happened as a result of what the International Court of Justice found?

LUIS MORENO OCAMPO: Starting from the second question, the International Court of Justice, which is a court who deal between states, received a request from Armenia against Azerbaijan based not on Genocide Convention, based on a treaty that forbid — against discrimination. So, the International Criminal Court of Justice is not analyzing genocide. It’s analyzing a different treaty against discrimination.

But in this case, since February — since February, for the last six months — the International Criminal Court of Justice gave a binding order to Azerbaijan to free the blockade of what is called the Lachin corridor, that provided food and the essentials for the life of the Armenians in Azerbaijan. And Azerbaijan is refusing. In fact, it’s sealed off completely, since June. And that was not just ICJ, the International Court of Justice, say. In July 26, the Red Cross say that. Since June, we provide — you cannot move nothing from the Lachin corridor. So, that are the facts. And this is genocide, creating the conditions.

The solution, as I said before, and why the Armenians are collateral victims, because the solution is an agreement between U.S., Russia and France. If they agree that they will stop this, they will do it. Because they cannot agree, they just call for negotiation. Remember the Rwanda time, an ambassador say calling on negotiations in — no, sorry, in Srebrenica, when they talk about the Balkans, talking about negotiation is to asking the Jews in the concentration camps to negotiate with Hitler. That it is.

So, this is a good moment. It’s a time for President Biden to transform and stop a genocide. We’ve got great people in power. President Biden is the first president, U.S. president, who recognized Armenia 1915 was a genocide. Yesterday, the Armenian ambassador in the U.N. Security Council meeting said, “We need not just commemoration. We need prevention.” And we have Secretary of State Blinken, who has a family affected. And we have Samantha Power, who really wrote the most important book on how to prevent genocide. But Samantha Power, in her book, said something very important. She explained how every time a genocide happened, since 1915 through the Jewish genocide, there’s always reason to not be involved, a denial, how many efforts the political leaders are doing to deny the genocide. And that’s why my report was basically saying the king is naked. It’s a genocide. Now, the solution is political. The leaders have to agree to stop the genocide. That’s the chance.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: I’d like to bring in professor Anna Ohanyan, a professor of political science and international relations at Stonehill College. Professor Ohanyan, if you could respond to the ongoing crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh and what you understand occurred at the meeting, Wednesday’s meeting, of the U.N. Security Council yesterday?

ANNA OHANYAN: In addition to the severe humanitarian crisis that the blockade, the siege of Nagorno-Karabakh Republic by Azerbaijan has created, the genocidal violence, essentially, that has created, as described by Mr. Ocampo, it also is taking place in a context of broader use of violence in the region. In 2020, when Azerbaijan, with Turkey’s backing, engaged in an offensive on the Nagorno-Karabakh entity, Azerbaijan was victorious, emerged victorious, recovered the territory surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh, as well as parts of Nagorno-Karabakh. The November 9 agreement, as your previous speaker mentioned, created and maintained the Lachin corridor connecting Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia.

What this peace process has been continuing since then by the Western — European Union, United States has been very, very active. This is in parallel with Russia’s continued attempt to remain relevant and provide security with its peacekeeping troops inside Nagorno-Karabakh. But what is transpiring, what the siege, what the blockade, the use of hunger as a weapon is demonstrating is that Baku, essentially — Baku’s strategy is to consolidate the victory it has achieved in the battlefield through the use of nonkinetic, non — tools that are not directly violent, such as the weapon as a hunger, in order to coerce the Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh conflict to either relocate — soft ethnic cleansing — or to fully submit to Azerbaijan, which Azerbaijan government refers to as “integration.” The key here, I think Baku’s objective is to not engage, to not provide political accommodation to the entity. And this is an entity that has been a de facto state, has been a self-governing unit since the First Nagorno-Karabakh War ended in 1994, and it was part of — as a result of Stalin’s gerrymandering, this entity was given to Soviet Azerbaijan, but even then, as part of Soviet Azerbaijan, it was an autonomous republic, self-governing. So, the siege, the hunger, is an attempt to eliminate, to not engage with the entity politically.

And in that respect, it’s quite dangerous. Using hunger as a weapon essentially creates the conditions of hybrid war. And as such, it’s very dangerous not just for the Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh, but also for other conflict regions in general. Much more recently, that strategy was also used in Ethiopia relative to the Tigray population in its north. So it’s quite troublesome as to what is happening. And it’s devastating also because there is opportunity that Azerbaijan has in moving towards pacifying the region. There are various actors involved. And this historic opportunity, considering that Russia has weakened, creates an opening in moving the region forward. And as such, it is a historic opportunity, because Russia, for almost a century, has been using interethnic cleavages, tensions, to remain relevant. So, geopolitical stakes of a peaceful, principled, dignified resolution of this conflict remain significant.

AMY GOODMAN: Anna Ohanyan, we want to thank you for being with us, professor of political science and international relations at Stonehill College, joining us from Boston, and Luis Moreno Ocampo, Argentine lawyer who served as the first prosecutor of the International Criminal Court. He also was the deputy prosecutor in Argentina’s Trial of the Juntas.

This is Democracy Now! Coming up, The Intercept reports a secret Pakistan cable documents U.S. pressure to remove Imran Khan as prime minister. Stay with us.

‘Situation is untenable and must be resolved without delay,’ Switzerland calls for free passage in Lachin corridor

 00:29,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 16, ARMENPRESS. Switzerland has called for an urgent solution to prevent the humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh.

“Switzerland supports a peaceful settlement of the differences between Armenia and Azerbaijan, and commends the efforts made by the parties and several diplomatic players in this respect,” Switzerland’s representative to the UN said at the UN Security Council emergency meeting on the humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh resulting from the Azeri blockade of Lachin Corridor.

“We regret the renewed tension over the last few months. In this context, we are deeply concerned by the increasing deterioration of the humanitarian situation following the restrictions on access through the Lachin corridor. Women, men and children are finding themselves in an increasingly difficult position, faced with a shortage of medicines and products essential to their survival. Restrictions on access have a profound impact on the most vulnerable, especially children, the sick, the elderly, people with disabilities and pregnant women. This situation is untenable and must be resolved without delay. It is vital to restore the free passage of civilians and essential goods. We call on the parties to respect the commitments they have taken, notably in the trilateral declaration of November 2020. The International Court of Justice has requested that Azerbaijan take all measures at its disposal to ensure the unimpeded movement of persons, vehicles and cargo along the Lachin corridor, in both directions. We call for compliance with the Court’s decisions. In addition, the parties must take urgent steps to facilitate safe, rapid and unhindered access for humanitarian actors to civilians in need, as required by international humanitarian law. We join the ICRC in calling on the parties to find a “humanitarian consensus” to ensure that impartial humanitarian aid reaches those who depend on it. The ICRC must be able to resume its humanitarian operations in the region without hindrance. Madam President, We recognize the diplomatic efforts undertaken to achieve a lasting peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The pursuit of constructive dialogue and the implementation of agreements on the ground, based on respect for the sovereignty and territorial integrity, as well as on the protection of minority rights, remain fundamental to building confidence for a long-term solution. We call on the parties to take de-escalation measures and intensify their efforts to normalize relations and reach a peace treaty. Switzerland remains ready to promote these efforts through its good offices, if both parties so wish. As a Council, we must do everything in our power to support efforts,” he added.

Azeri disinformation campaign continues with more false accusations, warns Armenian defense ministry

 10:59,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 17, ARMENPRESS. The Azerbaijani Ministry of Defense continues to disseminate disinformation, the Armenian Ministry of Defense warned Thursday.

Azerbaijan has once again falsely accused Armenia of opening gunfire on the border.

“The Ministry of Defense of Azerbaijan disseminated another disinformation. The statement disseminated by the MoD of Azerbaijan that allegedly on August 16, at around 11:25 p.m., the units of the Armenian Armed Forces fired against the Azerbaijani combat outposts located in the eastern part of the border, does not correspond to reality,” reads a statement released by the Armenian Ministry of Defense.